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Functions of Law


Laws such as the Equal Protection Clause are designed to serve a general function—namely, the promotion of social justice. This is just one of several primary functions served by law in the United States: [5]


  • Keeping the peace (e.g., designating some activities as crimes—violations of statutes for which the law imposes punishment)

  • Shaping moral standards (e.g., laws discouraging such activities as drug or alcohol abuse)

  • Promoting social justice (e.g., laws prohibiting discrimination in such areas as voting and employment)

  • Maintaining the status quo (e.g., laws preventing the forcible overthrow of the government)

  • Facilitating orderly change (e.g., laws and practices requiring public scrutiny of proposed statutes)

  • Facilitating planning (e.g., laws that enable businesses to evaluate the risks that they may be taking in a commercial venture)

  • Providing a basis for compromise (e.g., laws and practices making it possible to resolve disputes without taking them to trial)

  • Maximizing individual freedom (e.g., laws ensuring such rights as freedom of speech and religion)



KEY TAKEAWAYS


  • Law is a body of enforceable rules and principles of conduct. When we entrust the responsibility for adopting and enforcing legal rules and principles to government, we approve the formation of a legal system—the institutions and processes that actually enforce our laws. That system works because its key elements are stable and interact in reliable ways.

  • U.S. legal tradition rests on the principle of the rule of law—the principle by which government legitimately exercises its authority only in accordance with publicly declared laws that are adopted and enforced according to established procedure. Under the rule of law, the legal system adopts and enforces laws in a reasonably predictable manner. The principle of predictability, however, doesn’t in itself guarantee that a legal system is fair. A legal system can achieve a reasonable degree of fairness only if it also guarantees equal treatment of all members of society.

  • When it’s applied systematically, law isn’t always as flexible as it should be in preserving the peace and stability that members of society need to pursue their various social and economic activities. But because laws can’t be written to cover each and every contingency, we settle for general “rules and principles.” The key to flexibility in a legal system is flexibility in applying legal rules and principles.

  • U.S. law serves several primary functions:

    1. Keeping the peace

    2. Shaping moral standards

    3. Promoting social justice

    4. Maintaining the status quo

    5. Facilitating orderly change

    6. Facilitating planning

    7. Providing a basis for compromise

    8. Maximizing individual freedom

EXERCISE


(AACSB) Analysis

Individuals in the United States are guaranteed equal treatment under the law. Do you believe that all individuals do in fact receive equal treatment? Support your answer with examples.


[1] See Timothy Sexton, “Millions of Americans Break the Law Several Times a Day without Being Punished,” Associated Content, September 9, 2008,http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/979756/millions_of_americans_break_the_law.html (accessed November 12, 2011).

[2] Mark E. Roszkowski, Business Law: Principles, Cases, and Policy, 5th ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2002), 4.

[3] This section is based on Henry R. Cheesman, Contemporary Business and Online Commerce Law: Legal, Internet, Ethical, and Global Environments, 5th ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, 2006), 4.

[4] This section is based on Monroe E. Price and Peter Krug, The Enabling Environment for Free and Independent Media (Washington, DC: USAID Center for Democracy and Governance, December 2000), Chapter 3, athttp://www.medialaw.ru/e_pages/publications/ee/3.html (accessed November 12, 2011).

[5] See Henry R. Cheesman, Contemporary Business and Online Commerce Law: Legal, Internet, Ethical, and Global Environments, 5th ed. (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education, 2006), 3–4.


16.2 Criminal versus Civil Law

LEARNING OBJECTIVES


  1. Distinguish between criminal law and civil law, and understand the roles of plaintiffs and defendants in both criminal and civil cases.

  2. Define a tort, explain tort law, and discuss an intentional tort.

In the case of George McGovern and his Stratford Inn, we saw what sort of legal entanglements could discourage even a veteran lawmaker from pursuing a modest dream of business ownership. What about you? How easily discouraged would you be? Put yourself in the following scenario, which could happen to anybody:
“When you were in high school, you worked part time and over the sumers for your father, a house painter. Now that you’re in college, you’ve decided to take advantage of that experience to earn some money during your summer vacation. You set yourself up as a house-painting business and hire your college roommate to help you out. One fine summer day, the two of you are putting a coat of Misty Meadow acrylic latex on the exterior of a two-story Colonial. You’re working on the ground floor around the door of the house while your roommate is working from scaffolding over the garage. Looking up, you notice that, despite several warnings, your roommate has placed his can of paint at his feet rather than fixed it to the ladder bracing the platform. You’re about to say something yet one more time, but it’s too late: He accidentally kicks the bucket (so to speak), which bounces off the homeowner’s red sports car, denting the hood and splattering it with Misty Meadow. As luck would have it, the whole episode is witnessed by the homeowner’s neighbor, who approaches the scene of the disaster just as your roommate has climbed down from the scaffold. “Man, you must be dumber than a bag of hammers,” says the neighbor to your roommate, who’s in no mood for unsolicited opinions, and before you know what’s happening, he breaks the neighbor’s nose with a single well-placed punch.
“The homeowner sues you and your roommate for negligence, and the neighbor sues you and your roommate for assault and battery.” [1]
Clearly, being an employer—even of just one person—isn’t nearly as simple as you thought it would be. What should you have known about the basics of employment law in the state where you intended to paint houses? What should you have known about tort law? What about tax law? If you have to pay damages as a result of the homeowner’s negligence claim, can you at least deduct them as business expenses?

Welcome to the legal environment of business—the place where business interacts with the legal system. Besides the fact that these interactions are usually quite complicated, what valuable lessons should you learn from your experience once your case has been adjudicated (resolved in court)? You probably won’t be surprised to learn that your roommate is liable for negligence in kicking over the paint bucket, but you may be dismayed to learn that you are, too. When it comes to the claim of assault and battery, your roommate is also liable for that, but you may be protected from liability. As for the damages that you’ll probably have to pay in order to settle the homeowner’s negligence suit, you’ll be pleased to learn that you can indeed write them off as “ordinary” business expenses (unless they’re paid by your insurance company).


As we work our way through this chapter, we’ll look a little more closely at the types of law involved in your case, but we’ll start by observing that, in at least one respect, your roommate’s predicament can be more instructive than yours. That’s because assault and battery violates statutes established by two different types of law—criminal and civil.

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